Wednesday, October 9, 2013

"I used to be called Tiny, but Tinie Tempah's cousin actually told me to change my name," says Chris Brew who currently goes under the moniker Just Chris.

The UK-born-and-based musician has been in the game for less than two years, but he’s
anything but a newbie. He delves in musical ghostwriting, but he vows his silence regarding clients."I don't wanna mess up my money," the 19-year-old adds.

How long have you been
producing music and writing lyrics?

I've been producing music for less than two years. Prior, my
timing was off, and all my beats would come out terrible. I started writing lyrics way before I made beats, though. I used to
write and write, until I thought this is
enough. I never knew how to construct a verse properly, until I watched Chipmunk’s
“Who Are You'' music video. I counted the lines he rapped and realized it was
16 bars or lines then a chorus. To be honest, writing was the best way for me
to vent because I was going through a lot of stuff. There was no way to air it out, so I would just bottle it up
until I’d pour it all out on paper (or on the notepad on my laptop) at night.

Would you consider it an advantage or disadvantage to be a young musician?

I think it's an advantage because If I was around 30, and I had just started making music and releasing demos, I don't think anyone would even take me seriously especially as a rapper. In the comments they'd probably be like 'N-word you're 30, and you're still holding on to them pipe dreams. Let it go.' But because I'm kinda young, it's easier. People see there’s room for improvement. Even if my first song is rubbish, they'd say to themselves “this kid has got time to grow and develop.” However, I do feel because I'm under 20, I still have to gain people's respect in a way.

How do you think your
childhood affected your current endeavors?

I
grew up in East London where Grime originated, so I was more into Grime artists
like Ghetts (formerly Ghetto), Nasty Crew, Pay As You Go, Wiley & Crazy
Titch. Those guys were like the hood heroes to me. I never used to listen to
American music, but my sister's dad bought two albums, which were Jay-Z's The Blue Print 2 and 50 Cent's The Massacre. I used to bang those
albums out daily. I lived on a council estate* so everyone’s hobby was
football. There was this beautiful football cage in the middle of the estate,
and everyone would come out and we'd have tournaments or play Wembley or 60 Seconds.
The funny thing is, I never even wanted to be a rapper or make music at all. I
wanted to be a professional footballer and I slyly still do, hahah.

Do you have any guilty pleasure tracks you listen to?

I don't know if this is a guilty pleasure, but I'd say most Calvin Harris songs.

As a lyricist, what
words do you live by?

''So I live by a real simple philosophy, if you stay grounded,
watch God keep giving you reasons not to be.'' It's a Joe Budden lyric from the
song “Get Up.” It's probably my favorite lyric of all time.

What are some of your
projects in the works?

I got this song called “King” produced by my childhood friend
Tichy T. It's probably the biggest track to date I've ever recorded--think like
a 2017 Kanye. It's futuristic. It's incredible, and it will be the lead single
off my forthcoming EP Poor & Poetic.

Any closing words?

The world needs to know I'm coming (not like in a you-know-what
way), but like I am so ready to dethrone
a couple people.